Editor: Mark Schone
Updated: Today
Topic:

Iraq War

A document saved from the Army's shredder

A soldier who was ordered to shred documents about two soldiers killed in an apparent friendly fire incident rescued some of the paperwork and provided it to Salon.
On Oct. 14, 2008, Salon published an article about the deaths of Army Pfc. Albert Nelson and Pfc. Roger Suarez. The Army attributed their deaths in Iraq in 2006 to enemy action; Salon's investigation, which included graphic battle video and eyewitness testimony, indicated that their deaths were likely due to friendly fire. On the night of Oct. 14, 2008, after the publication of Salon's article, soldiers at Fort Carson, Colo., were ordered to shred documents related to both Nelson and Suarez. As proof that they were ordered to destroy the paperwork, a soldier saved some examples and provided them to Salon. The documents reproduced here are from the file of Albert Nelson. Some personal details have been redacted.

Related Stories

  • New friendly fire coverup: Army shreds files on dead soldiers

    Hours after Salon revealed evidence that two Americans were killed by a U.S. tank, not enemy fire, military officials destroyed papers on the men.
  • Friendly fire in Iraq -- and a coverup

    The Army says no, but a graphic video and eyewitness testimony indicate that a U.S. tank killed two American soldiers. The mother of one soldier demands answers.
  • Video: Friendly fire attack in Iraq

    Helmet-cam video from Ramadi, Iraq, where Pfc. Albert Nelson was allegedly killed by an American tank, and an interview with the soldier's mother.
  • The Army's version of the deaths of Nelson and Suarez

    Despite a video that seems to show friendly fire, and the discovery of a tank shell near the impact site, the official investigation attributes their deaths to enemy action.

Iraq war in the news

Loading...

Recommended Reads

The Gamble: General David Petraeus and the American Military Adventure in Iraq, 2006-2008
The author of "Fiasco" uses hundreds of hours of exclusive interviews with top officers in Iraq and extraordinary on-the-ground reportage to document the inside story of the Iraq War since late 2005.
By Thomas E. Ricks

Small Wars Journal
A journal dedicated to the study of such subjects as counterinsurgency, foreign internal defense, support and stability operations, peacemaking, and peacekeeping. Founded by ex-Marines.

Afghanistan is worse than you think
We all knew that the situation in Afghanistan has been rapidly becoming worse. But few people know just how steep the downward spiral has been.
By Alex Koppelman, Salon

Currently in Salon